Kinsey v. Drury

126 A. 125, 146 Md. 227, 1924 Md. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 126 A. 125 (Kinsey v. Drury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinsey v. Drury, 126 A. 125, 146 Md. 227, 1924 Md. LEXIS 132 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

UitNER, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The decree to be reviewed on this appeal denied the claim of the appellants, .as judgment creditors, to an interest in the proceeds of the. sale'of' certain real estate in Howard County. The sale was made under the terms of a deed of *229 trust of the Brightwood Sanitorium Company, Incorporated, securing its promissory notes to the amount of $22,500. It is contended by the appellants that the deed of trust was in effect a mortgage, and that haring been recorded without an authorizing order of the court, after the expiration of the statutory period of six months from the time of its execution (Code, .art. 21, secs. 13 and 19), the debt it secured must be postponed to the judgments of the appellants, which are said to have been obtained upon claims contracted by them after the date of the deed of trust and without notice of its existence. The same contention was made in an injunction suit, by two of the present appellants' and another, to restrain the exercise of the power of sale conferred by the deed of trust, but the claims of the creditors who instituted that suit had not then been reduced to judgments, 'and a dismissal of their hill of complaint was affirmed by this Court on the ground that, as general creditors, they had no interest in the land which entitled them to an injunction against the impending sale. Kinsey v. Drury, 141 Md. 684. After the trustees named in the deed of trust had sold the property which it conveyed, and before the sale was ratified by tbe Circuit Court for Howard County in the equity proceeding in which it was reported, the appellants procured judgments on their claims. No objection was made to tbe ratification cf tiie sale, but subsequently the appellants interv '.med in the proceeding for the purpose of asserting a right to participate in the distribution of the $15,000 fund which the sale produced. It was the dismissal of their petition to that end which occasioned the present appeal.

The proceeds of the sale made under the deed of trust being insufficient for the payment of the debts therein mentioned, the pro rata allowance of the appellants’ claims, out of the funds to be distributed, would reduce the amounts to be received by those bolding the notes which the deed of trust was intended to secure. The controversy arises from this conflict of interest.

The argument for the appellants is that, as the object of tbe deed of trust was to provide security for money borrowed. *230 it should be viewed and treated as a mortgage for the purposes of our present inquiry mud decision. Tbis theory is sought to be supported by citations of Maryland cases in which it has been held that the nature of the transaction and the intention of the parties will be considered upon the question as to whether an instrument having the form of a deed should be held to be a mortgage. But those cases did not involve issues like the one now presented. They were mainly concerned with questions relating to the rigjit of redemption by a grantor or subsequent lienor, and to the operation of the usury law upon the agreement which the deed in dispute fulfilled. The question in this case is simply whether an instrument coneededly designed to secure ,a loan, but having the form and effect of a deed of trust, should be classified as a mortgage or as a deed with respect to the statutory provisions that any duly acknowledged deed or conveyance of land, “except deeds or conveyances by way of mortgages,” may be recorded .after* the prescribed six months’ period, and when so recorded shall have, as against the grantor, and his heirs or executors, and against all purchasers with notice, and against all creditor’s who shall become such after the recording of the deed or conveyance, the same validity and effect as if recorded in the time previously limited, and as against all creditors who shall become such before the recording of the instrument, and without notice, it shall have effect only as a contract for the conveyance of the estate to which it refers. Code, art. 21, sees. 19 and 21. The recording of a mortgage after the six months-’ period does not have a similar effect, as to constructive notice, unless it is recorded pursuant to an order of court, as provided by section 34 of article 16 of the Code. Harding v. Allen, 70 Md. 395; Nally v. Long, 56 Md. 567.

It has been definitely decided by this Court that a deed of trust securing an indebtedness is not a mortgage within the. meaning of various provisions of the recording statutes. In Stanhope v. Dodge, 52 Md. 483, it was held that a deed of trust to secure the payment of promissory notes of the grantor might be recorded after the expiration of six months from *231 its date and would then have the same validity as if recorded within that period. The requirement of section 32 of article 21 of the Code that no mortgage shall be valid, except as bee tween the parties., without an affidavit by the mortgagee as to the consideration, has been held applicable only to technical mortgages and not to deeds of trust. Shidy v. Cutter, 54 Md. 677; Snowden v. Pitcher, 45 Md. 265; Carson v. Phelps, 40 Md. 96; Stockett v. Holliday, 9 Md. 499; Charles v. Clagett, 3 Md. 82; Stanhope v. Dodge, supra. In Bank of Commerce v. Lanahan, 45 Md. 396, where the provisions of article 64 (now 66) of the Code relating to the exercise of powers of sale in mortgages were held not to apply to deeds of trust, the distinction between such instruments and technical mortgages was stated by Judge Alvey as. follows: “As to the question of the character of the deed, upon careful examination of its. provisions., we are of opinion that it is not a technical mortgage, within the contemplation of the Code, .art. 64, sec. 5, referred to-, but a deed of trust, clearly denominated such by the Code, art. 24, sec. 55. It is a deed of trust to secure debts; and while it has some of the attributes of a mortgage, yet it presents features which dis.-tinguish it from that class of security, strictly considered. By the legal, formal mortgage, as distinguished from instruments held to be mortgages by construction of courts of equity, the property is conveyed or assigned by the mortgagor to the mortgagee, in form like that of an absolute legal conveyance, but subject to. a proviso or condition by which the conveyance is to become void, or the estate is to be. recon-veyed, upon payment to the mortgagee of the principal sum secured, with interest, on a day certain; and upon non-performance of this condition, the mortgagee’s, conditional estate becomes absolute at law, and he may take possession thereof, but it remains redeemable in equity during a certain period under the rules imposed by courts of equity, or by statute.” In reference to the deed of trust then under consideration Judge Alvey said: “Upon default, of payment, these creditors., as mere cestuisi que trust under the deed, could not. take possession of the estate and apply the rents, and profits to *232

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Bluebook (online)
126 A. 125, 146 Md. 227, 1924 Md. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinsey-v-drury-md-1924.